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Green Update
From the MCG 2011 edition
Colleges remain ahead in sustainability efforts
GOING GREEN IS GOING BIG,AND universities have led the charge for sustainable living for years. Decades before celebrities like Jay Leno installed wind turbines on their homes, and way before Al Gore’s "An Inconvenient Truth" debuted, colleges were promoting ways to reduce our impact on the planet.
Attending a school that’s seriously committed to protecting the environment means there are signs of sustainability everywhere. You'll spot "green" roofs on campuses from Ithaca College to Penn State to Princeton, where rooftop vegetation helps control building temperature or collect rainwater for flushing toilets. Colorado State University (CSU), Elon University and the University of California, San Diego all use electric vehicles for campus maintenance. At many schools, compost stations in dining halls cut down on trash shipped to landfills and solar panels provide green energy. (At CSU, all dining centers on campus are operated on renewable electricity.)
It's not only about campus looks, though. Colleges are also finding better ways to teach sustainability in the classroom by giving students opportunities to practice what they learn in the real world.
Northland College in Ashland, Wis. adopted a mission to protect the environment and promote sustainability way back in 1971. The college offers 16 majors; 11 of them have some element of sustainability ingrained into the coursework.
"We have a very strong, hands-on, experiential philosophy. The campus should be a learning lab," says Clare Hintz, campus sustainability coordinator for Northland. "Students are the strongest drivers of innovation on campus."
Every other year at Northland, a class adds a photovoltaic array (solar panels) to a student-selected spot on campus. Schools like Northland that ingrain sustainability into everything they do give students plenty of opportunities to get their hands dirty. For example, the University of New Hampshire helps students learn sustainable farming on a 30-acre organic dairy farm. That's a lot of manure!
If you're interested in earning a degree focused on sustainability and the environment, there are plenty of majors to choose from:
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